User's Manual
Table Of Contents
- 1 Disclaimers
- 2 Safety information
- 3 Notice to user
- 4 Customer help
- 5 Quick start guide
- 6 Register the camera
- 7 A note about ergonomics
- 8 Camera parts
- 9 Screen elements
- 10 Navigating the menu system
- 11 Handling the camera
- 11.1 Charging the battery
- 11.2 Installing and removing the camera battery
- 11.3 Turning on and turning off the camera
- 11.4 Adjusting the angle of lens
- 11.5 Adjusting the infrared camera focus manually
- 11.6 Autofocusing the infrared camera
- 11.7 Continuous autofocus
- 11.8 Operating the laser distance meter
- 11.9 Measuring areas
- 11.10 Connecting external devices and storage media
- 11.11 Moving files to a computer
- 11.12 Assigning functions to the programmable buttons
- 11.13 Using the camera lamp as a flash
- 11.14 Changing camera lenses
- 11.15 Neck strap
- 11.16 Hand strap
- 12 Saving and working with images
- 13 Working with the image archive
- 14 Achieving a good image
- 15 Working with image modes
- 16 Working with measurement tools
- 17 Working with color alarms and isotherms
- 18 Annotating images
- 19 Programming the camera (time-lapse)
- 20 Recording video clips
- 21 Screening alarm
- 22 Pairing Bluetooth devices
- 23 Configuring Wi-Fi
- 24 Fetching data from external FLIR meters
- 25 Changing settings
- 26 Cleaning the camera
- 27 Technical data
- 27.1 Online field-of-view calculator
- 27.2 Note about technical data
- 27.3 Note about authoritative versions
- 27.4 FLIR T530 24°
- 27.5 FLIR T530 42°
- 27.6 FLIR T530 24° + 14°
- 27.7 FLIR T530 24° + 42°
- 27.8 FLIR T530 24° + 14° & 42°
- 27.9 FLIR T530 42° + 14°
- 27.10 FLIR T540 24°
- 27.11 FLIR T540 42°
- 27.12 FLIR T540 24° + 14°
- 27.13 FLIR T540 24° + 42°
- 27.14 FLIR T540 24° + 14° & 42°
- 27.15 FLIR T540 42° + 14°
- 28 Mechanical drawings
- 29 Application examples
- 30 About FLIR Systems
- 31 Terms, laws, and definitions
- 32 Thermographic measurement techniques
- 33 The secret to a good thermal image
- 34 About calibration
- 34.1 Introduction
- 34.2 Definition—what is calibration?
- 34.3 Camera calibration at FLIR Systems
- 34.4 The differences between a calibration performed by a user and that performed directly at FLIR Systems
- 34.5 Calibration, verification and adjustment
- 34.6 Non-uniformity correction
- 34.7 Thermal image adjustment (thermal tuning)
- 35 History of infrared technology
- 36 Theory of thermography
- 37 The measurement formula
- 38 Emissivity tables
About FLIR Systems
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FLIR Systems was established in 1978 to pioneer the development of high-performance
infrared imaging systems, and is the world leader in the design, manufacture, and mar-
keting of thermal imaging systems for a wide variety of commercial, industrial, and gov-
ernment applications. Today, FLIR Systems embraces five major companies with
outstanding achievements in infrared technology since 1958—the Swedish AGEMA In-
frared Systems (formerly AGA Infrared Systems), the three United States companies In-
digo Systems, FSI, and Inframetrics, and the French company Cedip.
Since 2007, FLIR Systems has acquired several companies with world-leading expertise
in sensor technologies:
• Extech Instruments (2007)
• Ifara Tecnologías (2008)
• Salvador Imaging (2009)
• OmniTech Partners (2009)
• Directed Perception (2009)
• Raymarine (2010)
• ICx Technologies (2010)
• TackTick Marine Digital Instruments (2011)
• Aerius Photonics (2011)
• Lorex Technology (2012)
• Traficon (2012)
• MARSS (2013)
• DigitalOptics micro-optics business (2013)
• DVTEL (2015)
• Point Grey Research (2016)
• Prox Dynamics (2016)
Figure 30.1 Patent documents from the early 1960s
FLIR Systems has three manufacturing plants in the United States (Portland, OR, Boston,
MA, Santa Barbara, CA) and one in Sweden (Stockholm). Since 2007 there is also a
manufacturing plant in Tallinn, Estonia. Direct sales offices in Belgium, Brazil, China,
France, Germany, Great Britain, Hong Kong, Italy, Japan, Korea, Sweden, and the USA
—together with a worldwide network of agents and distributors—support our internation-
al customer base.
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